Statistics for occurrence #1 of “Horace Walpole” in chapter 3, page 45 of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Walcott Boynton, Reader's History of American Literature:
... belonged rather to statesmanship than to literature, should have prepared the way for literature.
The more cultivated English people were not unprepared for seeing it in the American colonies; for Horace Walpole , the most brilliant man of his time, had written to his friend Mason, two years before the Declaration of Independence, that there would one day be a Thucydides in Boston and a Xenophon at New York. ...
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† | Horace Walpole | 138 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 user votes |
† This entity has been selected by the automated classifier as the most likely match in this context. It may or may not be the correct match.